Studio- Talk
“THE SPRING
BY CARL MARR
genre pictures. E. Bracht’s
exhibition room looks like-
wise like a fine studio, such
as Munkacsy, perhaps, might
have fitted up for his visitors,
and it houses half-a-dozen or
so of large capital landscapes.
The inseparable friends Prof.
Bantzer and Prof. W. Ritter
have, as usual, united their
work in one room, which
abounds with beautiful land-
scape work. An open - air
portrait of his wife and
children by Prof. Bantzer,
walking in spring time
through a flowery meadow,
calls for special attention.
Prof. Sterl has landscapes,
figure-subjects of quarrymen
and river boatsmen, and
portraits in his room. The
latter strike one most, perhaps:
Sterl possesses the rare faculty
the strongest card among
the strangers. There are five
collections of Liebermann
(covering the work of twenty-
five years, about 35 examples !)
and Max Slevogt on view.
Among further one - man
shows noit hailing from
Dresden, W. Triibner, L. von
Hofmann and Count Kalck-
reuth should be noticed.
As to Dresden itself,
all forces have come to
the fore, to prove that the
presence of a strong con-
tingent of home talent is ia
sufficient and eloquent justifi-
cation for the holding of such
large exhibitions in our
town.
G. Kuehl has filled two
rooms, which minutely copy
his studio at the Dresden
Academy, with a large series
of his excellent interiors and
302
PORTRAIT OF MISS F.
BY PROF. F. A. VON KAULBACH
“THE SPRING
BY CARL MARR
genre pictures. E. Bracht’s
exhibition room looks like-
wise like a fine studio, such
as Munkacsy, perhaps, might
have fitted up for his visitors,
and it houses half-a-dozen or
so of large capital landscapes.
The inseparable friends Prof.
Bantzer and Prof. W. Ritter
have, as usual, united their
work in one room, which
abounds with beautiful land-
scape work. An open - air
portrait of his wife and
children by Prof. Bantzer,
walking in spring time
through a flowery meadow,
calls for special attention.
Prof. Sterl has landscapes,
figure-subjects of quarrymen
and river boatsmen, and
portraits in his room. The
latter strike one most, perhaps:
Sterl possesses the rare faculty
the strongest card among
the strangers. There are five
collections of Liebermann
(covering the work of twenty-
five years, about 35 examples !)
and Max Slevogt on view.
Among further one - man
shows noit hailing from
Dresden, W. Triibner, L. von
Hofmann and Count Kalck-
reuth should be noticed.
As to Dresden itself,
all forces have come to
the fore, to prove that the
presence of a strong con-
tingent of home talent is ia
sufficient and eloquent justifi-
cation for the holding of such
large exhibitions in our
town.
G. Kuehl has filled two
rooms, which minutely copy
his studio at the Dresden
Academy, with a large series
of his excellent interiors and
302
PORTRAIT OF MISS F.
BY PROF. F. A. VON KAULBACH